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Transcript
Tumor Immunology
Tumor antigen
Tumor immune escape
Qingqing Wang
[email protected]
Contents
• Concept of immune surveillance
• Tumor antigens
• Immune mechanisms of tumor rejection
• Evasion of immune responses by tumors
• Immunotherapy for cancers
• Cancer is a major health problem worldwide
and is one of the most important causes of
morbidity and mortality in children and adults.
• Tumor immunology is the study of the
antigenic properties of transformed cells, the
host immune response to these tumor cells,
the immunologic consequences to the host of
the growth of malignant cells, and the means
by which the immune system can be
modulated to recognize tumor cells and
promote tumor eradication.
Cancer in 2007:
12.3 million new cases (2.48 million in
China annually)
7.6 million death (21.6% of total death)
Retinoblastoma
Cancer therapy:
Surgery, radiotherapy, chemotherapy
Biotherapy (Immunotherapy)?
Concept of immune surveillance
• Proposed by Macfarlane Burnet (1950s).
• The physiologic function of the immune system
is to prevent the outgrowth of transformed
cells or to destroy these cells before they
become harmful tumors and kill tumors after
they are formed.
• The cancerous disease is the result of failure of
this surveillance.
• Several lines of evidence support this idea.
Evidence supporting the concept of immune surveillance
Evidence
Conclusion
Histopathologic and clinical observations:
lymphocytic infiltrates around some tumors
and enlargement of draining lymph nodes
correlate with better prognosis
Immune responses against tumor
inhibit tumor growth
Experimental: transplants of a tumor are
rejected by animals previously exposed to that
tumor; immunity to tumor transplants can be
transferred by lymphocytes from tumorbearing animals
Tumor rejection shows features of
adaptive immunity (specificity and
memory) and is mediated by
lymphocytes
Clinical and experimental: immunodeficient
individuals have an increased incidence of
some types of tumors
The immune system protects
against the growth of tumors (the
concept of immune surveillance)
Relative risk of tumors in immunosuppressed
kidney transplant recipients
Tumor type
Relative risk
Kaposi’s sarcoma
50-100
Non-Hodgkin lymphoma
25-45
Carcinoma of the liver
20-35
Carcinoma of the skin
20-50
Carcinoma of the cervix
2.5-10
Melanoma
2.5-10
Lung
1-2
Tumor antigens
• Tumor antigens--potential targets for
cancer immunotherapy.
• A wide variety of cellular proteins have
been identified to function as tumor
antigens.
• Tumor antigens can be classified by the
specificity of the antigens or by origin
and nature of antigens
Classification by specificity of the
antigens
• Tumor-specific antigen (TSA): Antigens
found only in tumor cells (see next slide).
• Tumor-associated antigen (TAA): Antigens
found not only in tumor cells, but also in
some normal cells, but the quantity is
significantly higher in tumors than that in
normal tissues.
Classification by the origin and the
nature of the antigens
• Mutated self protein: TSAs that are induced by
carcinogens or radiation.
• Product of oncogene or mutated tumor
suppressor gene: mutated Ras, Bcr/Abl fusion
proteins; mutated p53 protein.
• Overexpressed or aberrantly expressed self
protein: Tyrosinase, gp100, MAGE, MART
proteins in melanoma.
• Oncogenic virus antigen: human papillomavirus
E6, E7 proteins in cervical carinoma; EBNA
proteins in EBV-induced lymphomas.
Types of tumor antigens recognized by T cells
• Ags induced by chemical/physical carcinogens
– Little or no cross-reactivity
– Ags are unique
– 1 chemical + same cell type: different Ags
– Ags are result of
random mutations
– Can induce protective
anti-tumor immunity
• Point-mutated ras oncogenes
• Three mutations at codon 12 represent the
vast of ras mutation
• found in 20-30% of human tumors
• Occur early in the transformation process
• Mutated p53 suppressor genes
• Mutation span across 4 exons.
• Lose the function of wild-type p53.
• Products of DNA translocation
• bcr/abl fusion gene product (p210
Bcr/Abl) of DNA translocation of chronic
myeloid leukemia (phi+, 9q34; 22q11)
The Philadelphia chromosome
(Phi+, 22q-) and chronic
myeloid leukaemia (CML).
BCR/ABL fusion protein enhances
tyrosine kinase activity.
Oncogene products
• Can be overexpressed in
tumors and may be
expressed in fetal and
adult tissues-similar to
oncofetal antigens
• Nonmutated HER-2/neu,
• Overexpressed or aberrantly expressed
self antigens
• PSA, MART-1/Melan A, tyrosinase, gp100
• Expressed in a tumor of a given type and
normal tissues from which it is derived
• Potentially useful target for immnotherapy for
tumor of prostate, ovary or melanocytes
• Viral antigens
• The virus is associated with the etiology of some
cancers
• Extensive cross-reactivity
– 1 virus + different cell types = same tumor Ags
– Tumor Ags = products of viral or cell genes
activated by virus
– Strongest immune responses
– Many DNA/RNA tumor viruses in animals
– Several are said to cause
•Epstein-Barr virus
•Herpes simplex type 2
•Human papilloma viruses
•Hepatitis B virus
•Human T lymphotropic
virus type 1
Burkitt’s lymphoma
Nasopharyngeal carcinoma
Cervical carcinoma?
Malignant skin warts
Malignant genital warts
Malignant laryngeal warts
Primary hepatocellular carcinoma
Adult T cell leukemia
Immune mechanisms of tumor
rejection
• Cell-mediated immunity plays a key role
in tumor rejection.
• Humoral immunity (antibodies) and
innate immunity also play a role in the
defense against tumors.
T cells
• Cytotoxic T Lymphocytes (CTL)
• CTLs are very effective in killing of tumor cells
when the number of tumor cells is less, e.g. at
the early stage of tumor and after surgical
removal of the tumor.
• Kill tumor cells via perforins and apoptosis
Induction of T cell responses to tumors
• Th cells
• Th1 cells secrete cytokines such as IFN- and
IL-2 that help activation of CD8+ CTLs or kill
tumor cells.
• Th1 cells express FasL that induce apoptosis of
tumor cells.
• Th2 cells help B cells to produce antibodies
that may kill tumor cells.
B cells
• Serve as APCs to present tumor antigens to T
cells.
• Secrete tumor specific antibodies that may kill
tumor cells by CDC and ADCC, which is
effective mostly against non-solid tumors.
• Opsonization of tumor cells: opsonized tumor
cells are killed more readily.
• Blockade of adhesive properties of tumor cells,
hereby inhibiting outgrowth and metastasis of
tumor.
Macrophages
• M are important in tumor immunity as APCs
to stimulate the immune response and as
potential effector cells to mediate tumor lysis.
• Activated M may produce cytotoxic factors
(such as reactive oxygen intermediates, TNF-,
etc.) that mediate killing of tumor cells.
• Studies in knockout mice have shown that the
production of nitric oxide (NO), which is a
mediator of tumor apoptosis, may be the most
critical mechanism employed by M.
M + tumor cells
M + tumor cells
(No IFN-)
+ IFN-
Tumor killing by macrophages
NK cells
•
•
•
•
•
Involved in immune surveillance
Non-specific, non-MHC restricted
Kill by direct contact via perforins
Kill by ADCC
Important in early stage - before CTLs
Evasion of immune response
by tumors
• Immune responses often fail to check
tumor growth, because these responses
are ineffective or because tumors
evolve to evade immune attack.
• Immune responses against tumors may
be weak that is easily outstriped by the
growth of tumors.
Mechanisms by which growing tumors
evade immune responses
•
Lack of tumor antigens or low antigenicity,
antigenic modulation
•
Loss of MHC antigens, or non-classical MHC
MHC-Ⅰ↓
•
Lack of Co-stimulatory molecules
Tumor cells lack B7 and other adhesion molecules
(LFA-1, LFA-3, ICAM-1); anergy
•
Tumor cells express FasL or Bcl-2 induces apoptosis of
T-cell
•
Tumor cells express mCRP
•
Poor function of antigen-presenting cells
•
Immunosuppressive substances
Tumor derived (TGF-), IL-10, VEGF…
•
Immunoselection
– Immune attack selects tumors cells of low (no)
immunogenicity
• Host immunodeficiency
– Genes, infection, suppression/depression (anesthetics,
stress, drugs, aging)
• Some antibodies stimulate tumor growth
• Induction of suppressor cells
Tumors activate suppressor cell activity (T, M, Myeloidderived suppressor cells, toleragenic DC…)
小鼠的脾肿大的程度和肿瘤大小(4T1)成正相关
4T1荷瘤小鼠脾脏中MDSC(CD11b+Gr-1+)与肿瘤进展的相关性
Institute of Immunology
Zhejiang University
4T1荷瘤小鼠脾脏中CD4+CD25+T cell (Treg)与肿瘤进展的关系
CD25
no tumor
tumor size 5-10mm
>20mm
10-15mm
1.96
2.29
7.15
12.89
21.79
21.09
20.85
14.47
CD4
Institute of Immunology
Zhejiang University
不同的MDSC亚群
Paola Allavena,Antonio Sica,Cecilia Garlanda,Alberto Mantovani.The Yin-Yang of tumorassociated macrophages in neoplastic progression and immune surveillance. Immunological
Reviews 2008. 222: 155–161
Mechanisms by which tumor evade immune responses
Tumor Immunotherapy
Active
Passive
Non-specific BCG, Corynebacterium,
cytokines
specific
Tumor vaccines or DNA
antigen-pulsed dendritic
cells
Non-specific LAK cells
specific
Antibodies alone or
antibody conjugates
Active immunotherapy for tumors
• Vaccination of the patient or animal model with tumor
vaccines to enhance the active anti-tumor immunity
• Types of tumor vaccines
- Cell extracts and oncolysates
- Whole tumor cell vaccine
• Wild-type tumor cells
• Gene-modified tumor cells
- Tumor DNA vaccine
- Tumor peptide vaccine
- Anti-idiotype mAb vaccine
树突状细胞(Dendritic cell, DC)
DC-based cancer vaccines
lysis
Cell lysate
Antigen presentation
to T cell
Acid elution
synthesis
Tumor cell
extraction
Native peptide
Antigen peptide
mRNA
transfection
cDN
A
vector
TAA cDNA
+
fusion
Antigen presentation
to T cell
The Nobel Prize in Physiology
or Medicine 2011
发现树突状细胞
Dendritic cells, DC
是启动适应性免疫应答
的关键细胞
R. M. Steinman and Z. A.
Cohn.
J. Exp. Med.
137, 1142–1162; 1973
拉尔夫·斯坦曼(Ralph M. Steinman)【已故】1943年出生于加拿大蒙特利尔,在麦
吉尔大学学习生物学和化学。之后在美国哈佛医学院学习医学,1968年获得医学博士学位
(MD)。于1970年被纽约洛克菲勒大学接纳,从1988年起成为免疫学教授。担任该校
免疫学与免疫性疾病中心主任。
树突状细胞瘤苗的临床应用
恶性黑色素瘤、前列腺癌、恶性淋巴瘤、白血病、其他实体瘤
(结直肠癌、 乳腺癌、卵巢癌、胰腺癌、肝胰管壶腹癌、胃癌、
食管癌、转移性肾癌 、儿童青少年好发的间叶组织来源的肉瘤)
的免疫治疗。
以DC治疗性疫苗研发著名的Dendroen公司,2005年已经完成了
前列腺癌DC治疗性疫苗(前列腺磷酸酯酶与GM-CSF的融合蛋白
致敏的DC,PROVENGE)的I-III期临床研究,获得了明显的疗效
并于2010年上市。
Michael等采用经照射的自身肿瘤细胞刺激的DC经皮下输注对
Ⅳ期恶性黑色素瘤患者进行了Ⅰ/Ⅱ期的临床试验,疗效显著。
国内树突状细胞疫苗临床研究现状
国内第一个SFDA批准的树突状细胞疫苗——“抗原致敏的人树突状细胞”(APDC)
曹雪涛,等
• 2002年获得SDA I期临床批文
• 2003年第二军医大学免疫学研究所开展
I期临床
• 2004年10月获得SFDA II期临床批文,
进行APDC治疗转移性大肠癌的II期临
床研究
Passive immunotherapy for tumors
• Transfer of immune effectors, including tumorspecific T cells and antibodies, into tumorbearing individuals.
• Passive immunization against tumor is rapid
but does not lead to long-lived immunity.
• Adoptive cellular therapy
• Adoptive cellular immunotherapy is the
transfer of cultured immune cells that have
anti-tumor activity into a tumor-bearing host.
• Lymphokine-activated killer (LAK) cells, and
tumor-infiltrating lymphocytes (TILs).
Adoptive cellular therapy
• Therapy with anti-tumor antibodies
• Tumor-specific monoclonal antibodies may be
useful for specific immunotherapy for tumor.
• Monoclonal antibody-directed targeting
immunotherapy.
- Tumor-specific monoclonal antibodies are
conjugated with cytotoxic drug, toxin, or
isotope.
- The Ab serves as a carrier that can
specifically bind to tumor cells so that the
conjugated agent can directly act on the
tumor cells.
Anti-tumor monoclonal antibodies approved for clinical use
单抗名称
治疗靶点
适应症
抗CD20(Rituximab)
CD20
低分化B淋巴瘤、非霍奇金淋
抗CD33(Calicheamicin)
CD33
抗CD52(Alemtuzumab)
CD52
巴瘤
急性髓样白血病
抗表皮生长因子受体(Herceptin) Her-2/neu
慢性B细胞白血病
Cetuximab(Erbitux)
EGFR
乳腺癌
Bevacizumab(Avastin)
VEGF
晚期结直肠癌
Ibritumomab tiuxetan(Zevalin)
90Y标记抗CD20
转移性结直肠癌
Tositumomab(Bexxar)
131I标记抗CD20
非霍奇金淋巴瘤
非霍奇金淋巴瘤
Review questions
• Tumor antigen, TAA, TSA
• The possible mechanisms by which
growing tumors evade immune
responses.
The End